134th Division (Imperial Japanese Army) explained

Unit Name:134th Division
Native Name:第134師団
Dates:1945–1945
Country: Empire of Japan
Allegiance:1st area army
Branch:Imperial Japanese Army
Type:Infantry
Size:17891 or 14056[1]
Garrison:Fangzheng County
Nickname:Jewel division
Battles:Soviet invasion of Manchuria
134th Division
Date:9 August 1945
Parent:1st area army
Subordinate:
  • Divisional headquarters (240 men)[2]
  • 365. Infantry regiment (Manchuria, 3609 men)
  • 366. Infantry regiment (Manchuria, 3609 men)
  • 367. Infantry regiment (Manchuria, 3609 men)
  • 134. Field artillery regiment (1923 men)
  • 134. Engineer regiment (964 men)
  • 134. Transport regiment (1180 men)
  • 134. Airborne (assault) battalion (1130 men)
  • 134. Signals company (239 men)
  • 134. Ordnance company (400 men)
  • 134. Veterinary department (119 men)
  • 134/1. Field hospital (304 men)
  • 134/4. Field hospital (311 men)
  • Army hospital
  • 134. Epidemic Prevention and Water Purification Department (254 men)

The was an infantry division of the Imperial Japanese Army. Its call sign was the . It was formed 10 July 1945 in Jiamusi as a triangular division. It was a part of the 8 simultaneously created divisions batch comprising 134th, 135th, 136th, 137th, 138th, 139th, 148th and 149th divisions. The nucleus for the formation were the 14th border guards group, Fujin garrison and 78th Independent Mixed Brigade.

Action

The division formation was complete 30 July 1945.[3] Initially the 134th division was assigned to the 5th army, but was reassigned to 1st area army at the start of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria 9 August 1945. The division combat efficiency was estimated by Kwantung Army to be 15%.[4]

As the positions at Songhua River were deemed untenable, the 134th division have started retreat to Fangzheng County after a few delaying skirmishes. Since the divisional radio equipment breakdown 11 August 1945, the 134th division situation is unknown, with no contemporary records covering period prior to surrender of Japan 15 August 1945.

The 134th division was disarmed 25 August 1945, after suffering 471 men killed in the short campaign. Despite light losses, the division was severely disorganized, losing one-third of combat efficiency during retreat.[5]

The majority of men of 134th division were taken to Soviet Union labour camps near Khabarovsk 26 September 1945.

See also

Notes and references

Notes and References

  1. http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/Monos/pdfs/JM-155/JM-155.pdf Record of Operations Against Soviet Russia Northern and Western Fronts (August-September 1945), p. 266
  2. http://www.jacar.go.jp/DAS/meta/imageen_C15011177100?IS_STYLE=eng&IS_KIND=SimpleSummary&IS_TAG_S1=InfoSDU&IS_KEY_S1=%E7%AC%AC%EF%BC%91%EF%BC%93%EF%BC%94%E5%B8%AB%E5%9B%A3%7C%22134th%20Division%22&IS_LGC_S32=&IS_TAG_S32=& Scan of the original order of battle
  3. http://www.jacar.go.jp/english/glossary_en/term/0100-0040-0070-0010-0010-0010-0020.html 134th Division (Magatama)
  4. http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/Monos/pdfs/JM-154/JM-154.pdf Record of Operations against Soviet Russia, Eastern Front (August 1945), p. 57
  5. http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/Monos/pdfs/JM-154/JM-154.pdf Record of Operations against Soviet Russia, Eastern Front (August 1945), p. 70